Blog​​​​​​ ​​​​ – NELK

NELK

Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany
EG.01, Normative Orders Building
17 and 18 July 2025 

This two-day workshop examines multiple mobilities and diverse migratory patterns in African and Afro-Diasporic literature and media from a transcultural and transnational perspective. The main premise is that both literature and media unfold how Africans crisscross the globe, how some Africans have permanently embraced “mobile lives" (Elliott and Urry 2010) and how migration from Africa to other continents and back – whether voluntary or involuntary – shapes African cultures and communities at home and abroad in the age of rapid globalisation. By focusing on mobility and migration as the most pervasive phenomenon of our present times, the workshop seeks to highlight not only the connection between the two, but more importantly, how multiple mobilities define the migrant experience and vice versa, and how a critical investigation of these mobilities facilitates the process of comprehending the distinct experiences of migrants in our interconnected yet conflict-ridden world.
IEAS NELK Poster Workshop 2025

NELK

Mai 7 2025
18:00

Mobility and Belonging through the Global Novel and the Border Regime - representations that matter

Nadia Butt - Mobility, Migration, Modernity: The Global Novel and Its Theory 

Nadia Butt

Mobility, Migration, Modernity: The Global Novel and Its Theory 

This lecture provides the theoretical frames of the global novel in the twenty-first century. Drawing upon existing research on the global novel in relation to world literature, postcolonial literature, diasporic literature, transcultural or transnational literature, the aim is to define the global novel from the perspective of global change, modernity, mass migration and mobility, the realities of which have fundamentally shaped the form and content of the novel today. My contention is that the global novel can be theorised in three major ways: First, how it reveals the outcome of travel, mobility, and migration; second, how the experience of displacement and exile are often essential to the global novel third, how the global novel unfolds the challenges of the diasporic condition. To this end, I will allude to a significant number of novels from the Global South, which can be read from the theoretical framework presented in the lecture.

Veranstalter*in:
Cornelia Goethe Centrum
In Kooperation mit:
GRADE Center Gender
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main

Please find more info here


NELK

Jan 23 2025
18:00

The Global More-than-Novel:  The Global Novel as Form and Object

Cancelled: Guest lecture by Dr. Jernej Habjan (ZRC SAZU)